Smith-Schuster steps into No. 1 receiver role nicely
LATROBE — JuJu Smith-Schuster is a b-a-a-a-a-a-d man.
The receiver whoĢƵ been tasked to step up as the No. 1 receiver in place of Antonio Brown has been a beast through two camp practices.
On Saturday, for the second consecutive day, Smith-Schuster scored an early touchdown in Seven Shots, among other big catches.
This after Smith-Schuster had run past both starting corners — Steven Nelson and later Joe Haden — for deep touchdown passes on Friday.
It appears the concerns about replacing Brown might be overwrought.
But former Steelers cornerback and current CBS Sports analyst Bryant McFadden, who watched SaturdayĢƵ practice at Saint Vincent College, said itĢƵ because of Ben Roethlisberger.
“The most important part when it comes to trying to determine the pass-catcher position is Seven,” McFadden said. “Seven looks real good. When you have a quarterback, that is the most important part of your team offensively. Even though you might have an elite pass-catcher, they’re only as good as their quarterback, and Ben has shown the ability to get the most out of whoever it is thatĢƵ lining up there.
“Remember, before AB there was Mike Wallace,” McFadden added. “And when Mike left, it was like, ‘Will AB be able to perform as a No. 1 pass-catcher?’ Yes he did. Not just because of who he was as a player but look who the quarterback was.
“Watching Ben today, heĢƵ slimmed up. He looks to be in tip-top shape. His arm appears to be extremely accurate. And the mental part hasn’t left at all. I think thatĢƵ a huge factor in the success as far as determining how you replace what AB provided.”
McFadden said that Smith-Schuster running past both Steelers cornerbacks on Friday shouldn’t be reason to worry about the defense.
“ItĢƵ good news,” McFadden said, “because No. 1, JuJu hasn’t dropped off. HeĢƵ embracing the No. 1 wide receiver role. No. 2, heĢƵ gotten faster. And lastly, the third thing, when you’re playing against an elite player, they will get the best of you, but you will eventually get the best of them. ThatĢƵ the game within the game we’ll see with guys like Nelson and Haden. I’m sure they’re going to get the opportunities to really dominate JuJu. ThatĢƵ the back-and-forth competitive thing within the game.”
McFadden pointed to a play in SaturdayĢƵ practice as an example.
“They tried to get Joe on a double move,” McFadden said. “JuJu ran an out and up on him and Joe was on top of him. Ben had to pump, pump, and then had to go in the opposite direction. Most people didn’t see it because Joe didn’t get to play on the ball. His coverage was so phenomenal it forced Ben to go the opposite direction. ThatĢƵ the game within the game that you love to see from quality players. When you’re on a good team with good players, every day might not be your day, but the object is to bounce back the next day and I think Joe had a successful day because JuJu didn’t get behind him at all.”
Fast defense
Roethlisberger didn’t feign excitement when asked whether he noticed anything different about the defense last spring.
“They were flying around,” Roethlisberger said. “I know we’ve said things like that in the past, but just to see how fast those guys are moving, covering — the secondary guys, the linebackers, the d-line. Even on a simple run play — when our coaches let the runner run so you can get some pursuit — it felt like all 11 guys on defense were getting to the runner, getting to a receiver. It just feels like thereĢƵ more energy over there.”
Roethlisberger chuckled to himself for what he was about to say, that heĢƵ excited about going up against the defense in pads for the first time today.
“ThatĢƵ the exclamation point for the defense,” he said. “We’ll see how it gets when we get out here and do some of these things, but I’m excited for them because they seem to be a really fast defense.”
“The speedĢƵ markedly up from last year,” said LBers coach Jerry Olsavsky. “Devin (Bush) is just much faster. You just can’t coach that. Mark (Barron) can really move, too. ItĢƵ just a good situation.”
The trade up
As rumors swirled on draft day that the Steelers would attempt to trade up for Bush, Olsavsky refused to buy in. He might’ve been the only guy in the organization who wasn’t on pins and needles that night.
“I wasn’t because we don’t do that. We don’t trade up,” Olsavsky said. “So on draft day I was sitting there and people were teasing me saying ‘Hey we’re going to go up and do this,’ and I’m like, ‘We aren’t doing that.’ And then it fell. ThatĢƵ how crazy the draft is; one guy goes to a team you don’t expect and another team doesn’t want your guy and is like ‘LetĢƵ (trade) outta here and get another guy later.’ And we paid the right price.”
Olsavsky explained that he didn’t expect the Detroit Lions to take the tight end (T.J. Hockenson) that Denver wanted. And when the Broncos’ turn came up at pick 10, they figured they could get a tight end later, and traded with the Steelers, who of course took Bush.
Bush has been learning the buck inside position, which has traditionally been the spot held by the playcaller. James Farrior often talked about not truly understanding the position for years.
Olsavsky was asked if Bush will be overwhelmed early on.
“I don’t think he’ll be overwhelmed because he was raised right,” Olsavsky said. “His familyĢƵ good, his dad played, heĢƵ been around guys his whole life, he played at Michigan, his godfather is Derrick Brooks. When you’re exposed to that environment, a great environment with a great family and a dad who loves to play football and teaches you how to play football, you love it. ThatĢƵ really what you see, so I don’t think heĢƵ overly anxious. HeĢƵ just waiting to get his chance.”
ItĢƵ early, but Olsavsky said of Bush, “HeĢƵ a great kid. HeĢƵ intelligent. He needs to be a little louder but that’ll come. He knows what heĢƵ doing, and he can run.”
So far, Bush is rotating with Vince Williams and Mark Barron at the two inside positions. Clearly, though, the Steelers have big plans for their prized rookie.
Colbert, like all of us, year-to-year
Steelers General Manager Kevin Colbert turned down a contract extension from the Steelers last week because he wants to take the rest of his career on a year-to-year basis. ThatĢƵ what he told team president Art Rooney II after his last extension, and Rooney agreed to ColbertĢƵ plan.
Colbert is in the 20th season with the Steelers. His current contract expires next May, around which time the 62-year-old will consider another year.
“That hasn’t changed anything that we’re doing from a preparation standpoint,” Colbert said. “My schedule this year is as busy as it was in any previous year in terms of college visits, college work, college studies, games, and all of that. Nothing has changed along those lines. When we’re in the meetings with scouts, I’m talking about things we have to do different next year in our meetings. Our mindset is about 2019, and 2019 is the priority. I’m not thinking about this being my last year.
“I still love what I do,” he added. “And as long as I still love what I do, I could see myself continuing to do it. But we just want to do that on a year-to-year basis.”
Negotiating plan
The Steelers are currently in contract talks with Joe Haden, whoĢƵ entering the final year of his contract.
A team source said that HadenĢƵ age — 30 — won’t impact on the talks, and that the Steelers aren’t waiting to see if Haden remains healthy through camp.
But that is the plan with Bud Dupree though. The Steelers want to watch Dupree perform in preseason before deciding whether to extend an offer.
Dupree would be more of a deadline negotiation, while two other players in the final years of contracts — safety Sean Davis and defensive tackle Javon Hargrave — will draw the Steelers’ attention after their done negotiating with Haden.
Those are the only four players being discussed internally by the team at this time.
Hall of honor
The Steelers announced their 2019 Hall of Honor class Saturday:
n Larry Brown, TE/RT, 1971-84 — Brown caught a four-yard touchdown pass in Super Bowl IX but established himself as one of the most underrated performers in team history with his dominating play at right tackle. Sportswriter Ed Bouchette once asked Chuck Noll which of his players not in the Hall of Fame should be, and Noll said Brown.
n Bill Cowher, head coach, 1992-2006 — Won 149 games, eight division titles, and Super Bowl XL. Was named the Associated Press NFL Coach of the Year in 1992. An easy choice.
n Elbie Nickel, TE, 1947-57 — Caught 329 passes and scored 37 touchdowns. Was considered the teamĢƵ greatest tight end until Heath Miller came along and caught 592 passes for 45 touchdowns. So why not induct Heath? Regardless, Nickel was one of the organizationĢƵ first offensive stars.
n Hines Ward, WR, 1998-2011 — The franchiseĢƵ all-time leader in receptions (1,000), receiving yards (12,083) and receiving touchdowns (85). Another easy choice.
The induction ceremony will be held Sunday, Sept. 29 at Heinz Field.

